A VFW post commander who donated his Purple Heart medal so that a Green Beret killed in Afghanistan would not have to be buried without one will get his replaced, thanks to Suffolk County N.Y. Executive Steve Levy.

Bruce Brenner, Commander of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #1469, in Huntington N.Y., heard of the disappointment the ruling caused Bishop’s family as they were making funeral plans, and offered to give them the Purple Heart he earned in Vietnam.

Bishop’s family buried him with the medal pinned to his chest.

“My mother was really agitated by the technicality of the matter,” said Bishop’s brother, Stephen Bishop, of Middle Island, NY. “This was a kind act.”

Bishop was killed when the helicopter in which he was riding crashed during a drug interdiction mission in western Afghanistan. He was buried Nov. 9 at Calverton National Cemetery.

Levy plans to give Brenner a replacement medal at a ceremony Monday at the County Executive’s offices in Hauppauge.

Stephen Bishop said Brenner’s generosity was particularly comforting because it allowed his family to include the medal in the burial.

“This means more to us coming from Bruce than it would coming from the Army,” Bishop said.

Brenner earned the Purple Heart in 1970, when he was hit by shrapnel near the Cambodian border.

“I just thought about the family, the mother,” Brenner said. “It was a pleasure for me to do it. It was a gift from one soldier to another.

I am a Newsday reporter who writes about soldiers and veterans, particularly from the point of view of military folks and families living on Long Island and New York City. Soldiers and their families here don’t have the luxury of living near big military bases, where people tend to be more understanding of ... Continue reading →